Sunday, November 28, 2010

Life of a Houseman in GH in 2010

Can't believe it but it's true, there are just too many houseman around who got nothing to do. How are they going to be trained and function as a capable doctor later?


Saturday November 27, 2010

Time even for a movie during work

PETALING JAYA: Some housemen in a Klang Valley hospital have so little work that they can even catch a movie during their shift, claimed a medical officer, who declined to be named.

“It was because they knew that the medical officers (senior doctors) would just do the work instead,” she said yesterday.

She added that some specialists and heads of department were reluctant to give more work to housemen.

However, the doctor said she received adequate experience when she did her housemanship at the Sultanah Aminah Hospital in Johor.

Another doctor, who had recently completed his housemanship at the same hospital, said his peers in the Klang Valley also said they were not given enough responsibilities.

“Since the beginning of my housemanship and until the time I left two months ago, the housemen in the hospital where I was trained, had sufficient training on the job,” he said.

Related Story:
Too many new doctors and too few hospitals to train them

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Houseman glut in Malaysia

Over supply of Houseman finally get attention from the higher authority, however is condition going to change? Sadly, i don't think so. Here is an article which i would like to share.


Houseman Glut : Why should we be surprised?

It is no surprise that finally someone has spoken out against the sudden rise in the tide of houseman arrivals. With the production mill at full capacity, Malaysia is seeing a varied quality of graduates arriving at our wards. Every new houseman is so different depending on where they have studied making it almost impossible to tailor make a specific program during their housemanship years. Now with more dubious medical schools being allowed to operate, the quality is sure to drop, resulting in a more strenuous effort in training them during housemanship years.

Building more training hospitals as suggested by our honourable health minister will not solve but in fact aggravate the problem. As it is, our current hospitals are poorly staffed by experienced doctors. With a surge of housemen, more hospitals will only dilute the expertise in each of them.

Malaysia wants to achieve a good doctor patient ratio in the shortest possible duration. Unfortunately many policymakers are unaware of the actual situation on the ground and therefore implementing a quick fix solution by approving more medical schools in Malaysia. There is no foresight to plan for the future careers of these newer doctors as post graduate places are even more limited. Now the current medical officers and specialists are left to retrain many of these new doctors with the barest of resources.

Recent decision to allow foreign medical institutions to set up camp will only result in a potential mass efflux of experienced doctors from our local hospitals and universities. Smaller medical schools can only hope to scramble for the remaining few to fill their academic positions. This will further widen the already gaping difference in competency among our new medical graduates.

Malaysia needs to solidify the existing institutions. They should seek to develop collaboration between local faculties and foreign medical schools, not just allowing them to set up camp here, which can potentially further isolate disadvantaged local faculties.

Why is it that General Medical Council of the United Kingdom refuses to recognise local medical degrees, when their universities are setting up camp in our backyard and populating their academia with local expertise, many of whom are from local universities prior??

The Government should therefore strive to strengthen our local universities by establishing and encouraging collaboration between foreign medical faculties and local ones. In this way, the resources can be solidified and perhaps result in better research ideas and eventual international recognition.

Otherwise, ultimately it is the public that will be the losers with less than competent doctors attending to them.

posted in - Education, - TE Cheah |

Related article in The Star